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THAI SOCIAL STRUCTURE
In the Thai social system, the village is the unit. It was
in former days, a self-contained one in its economy and needs.
The people's habits and customs were based mainly o n agriculture
and religion. Most villages had a Buddhist monastery and a shrine
for a village deity. The monastery served their spiritual as
well as the people's education. All arts, crafts and learning
emanated from the monastery. From birth till death it centred
round it. Its precincts were the meeting place for social g
atherings on festive occasions. As to the village shrine it
was used only occasionally in times of distress or on New Year's
day when offerings were made. It had nothing to do with Buddhism.
No doubt Buddhism softened and tamed animism in many of its
cults. The above is only a fundamental and comparative statement
which a student has to bear in mind when dealing with mod ern
cultural problems. The social system, habits and customs as
seen in modern times are superficial modifications of the fundamentals
and in a comparative degree only.
In some outlying districts where there are retarded developments
of culture due to lack of intercommunication and new ideas,
the people are still in their primitive state, quite in contrast
to the progress in the capital, towns and cities.
In these progressive parts "old times are changed, old
manners gone" and a new type of cultures fills its place.
This is a sign of progress but it must come gratdually. Adapt
the old to the new but not in a revolutionary way. The new cultures
have also their dangers with problems to be solved, because
people take too much interest in politics. To adopt new cultures
wholly unsuited to the needs which are peculiar to, and characteristic
of each particular place is a danger. Culture ought to be varied
with characteristics of its own in each locality and area, harmonizing,
however, with the whole-a unity in diversity.
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